Hyderabad,
Sep 13 (IANS) Coal production in the government-owned Singareni
Collieries Company Limited (SCCL) came to a grinding halt Tuesday as its
over 100,000 workers joined a 'people's strike' demanding a separate
state of Telangana be carved out of Andhra Pradesh, an official said.
Work in 50 mines spread over
Adilabad, Karimnagar, Warangal and Khammam districts in Telangana region
came to a standstill as the employees began the indefinite strike
Tuesday morning on the call of the Telangana Joint Action Committee
(JAC).
The employees did not turn up for
duty from 7 a.m. as all their 14 unions were supporting the strike call.
On a normal day, the company produces about 120,000 tonnes of coal in
36 underground and 14 opencast mines, said a company official.
Singareni employees began a 'rasta roko' movement by forming human chains.
They were also participating in
various sports and cultural competitions near the mines to show their
solidarity with 'Sakala Janula Samme' or 'people's strike'.
If it continues, the strike is
likely to affect nearly 10 thermal power stations in Andhra Pradesh,
Karnataka and Maharashtra. With an installed capacity of 7,000 MW, these
stations depend on Singareni coal for their operations.
The strike by 400,000 government
employees in Telangana from Tuesday is also likely to bring the
administration to a halt and affect the delivery of public services in
the region.
The JAC has decided to go ahead with the strike despite Chief Minister N. Kiran Kumar Reddy threatening to act tough.The government Monday made it clear that it would not hesitate to invoke the Essential Services Maintenance Act (ESMA) to ban strikes, implement a 'no work, no pay' order and initiate disciplinary action against the strikers.
Government teachers, employees of state-owned Andhra Pradesh Road Transport Corporation and other public sector undertakings also plan to join the strike from Sep 16.
At a massive public meeting in Karimnagar Monday night, leaders of Telangana Rashtra Samithi (TRS) and JAC warned the government against using ESMA.
'Telangana will burn if the
government dares to use ESMA against any employee, teacher or worker,'
said TRS chief K. Chandrasekhara Rao.
KCR, as Rao is popularly known,
said the agitation would not stop till the central government fulfills
its Dec 9, 2009 promise to carve out Telangana state.
Source: in.news.yahoo.com
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